I Know I Have Been Happiest
Dorothy Parker
I know I have been happiest at your side; But what is done, is done, and all’s to be. And small the good, to linger dolefully— Gayly it lived, and gallantly it died. I will not make you songs of hearts denied, And you, being man, would have no tears of me, And should I offer you fidelity, You’d be, I think, a little terrified. Yet this the need of woman, this her curse: To range her little gifts, and give, and give, Because the throb of giving’s sweet to bear. To you, who never begged me vows or verse, My gift shall be my absence, while I live; But after that, my dear, I cannot swear.
Next 10 Poems
- Dorothy Parker : I Shall Come Back
- Dorothy Parker : Incurable
- Dorothy Parker : Indian Summer
- Dorothy Parker : Inscription For The Ceiling Of A Bedroom
- Dorothy Parker : Interior
- Dorothy Parker : Interview
- Dorothy Parker : Inventory
- Dorothy Parker : Iseult Of Brittany
- Dorothy Parker : Landscape
- Dorothy Parker : Liebestod
Previous 10 Poems
- Dorothy Parker : Hearthside
- Dorothy Parker : Healed
- Dorothy Parker : Harriet Beecher Stowe
- Dorothy Parker : Guinevere At Her Fireside
- Dorothy Parker : Godspeed
- Dorothy Parker : Godmother
- Dorothy Parker : George Sand
- Dorothy Parker : George Gissing
- Dorothy Parker : General Review Of The Sex Situation
- Dorothy Parker : Garden-spot